Your profit and loss depends on your capital. Someone with a $50k portfolio will make more than someone with a trading account of only $25k. Also your trading style and risk parameters come into question as well; the more you risk the more you can make.
A prop trader is someone that is trading someone else's money, "the firm," and typically making commissions on the profitable trades they make. A day trader is someone who buys securities and sells them in the same day. Intra-day trading is a term also used. A prop trader can be a day-trader if that is the firm or the individuals trading style.
Yes, intra-day trading can be included in an audit, particularly if the audit is focused on a trader's or a firm's overall trading activities. Auditors may review intra-day transactions to ensure compliance with regulations, verify the accuracy of financial reporting, and assess the effectiveness of internal controls. The inclusion depends on the scope of the audit and the specific regulations governing the trading activities.
I am a Day Trader. I make about $6000-$8000 a month trading with an average of 28k equity each month.
The average salary is $21.56 per day
Yes you can. Refer to the "Long vs Short" free video at the link below: http://www.tradingapples.com/beginning-trader-training-seri/
it was .01cents per day.
it depends were your at,if you're somewhere like New York your average salary is around 45,50 $ a day,but if your somewhere like Georgia the average salaries about 20 $ a day.
2 dollars a day
900000000000 dollars a day
It is basically supply and demand. If you are good at economics or an economics major it makes the most sense. I took a free course at this site that helped me greatly: http://www.tradingapples.com/beginning-trader-training-seri/
A day trader is a trader who buys and sells financial instruments (eg stocks, options, futures, derivatives, currencies) within the same trading day such that all positions will usually be closed before the market close of the trading day. - An institutional day trader is a trader who works for a financial institution. - A retail day trader is a trader who works for himself, or in partnership with a few other traders. A retail trader generally trades with his own capital, though he may also trade with other people's money. A proprietary trader ("prop trader") is a trader who trades securities on the account of the institution he/she works for, not for client-based business.
The average salary in 1923 depended upon what job the person did. For example, most people averaged two to three dollars per day. This was for mostly average workers.